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If you want to participate in research studies, you may have one or more of these motivations: Making money; Contributing to science; Helping to find a cure for a disease; Researching a cure from a disease you have; Giving opinions

You have a hypothesis, and your research study is ready to go—now how many participants are enough to test your theory? Research Statistics provide a good estimate for the numbers of people you need to test, but what about the

Recruiting participants for your study and experiment can be expensive, but it can be even more costly if you don’t know whether your recruitment drives are successful. Sending a Research Assistant to poster a campus may sound good (and cheap)

If you are conducting a psychology study in a university, you may think you are in luck — there are free participants available to you from the Psych 101 class. Those folks, by virtue of taking the class, are directed

What does it take to incentivize an average person – a would-be participant – to become a subject in your study? How do you make it worth someone’s while to leave their house, drive to your facility, spend an hour

Your hypothesis is formulated, your study is outlined, you are ready to go ahead with testing your research thesis. Now all that’s left is to find participants who will provide their thoughts on the topic or choose between the red